speeches · April 6, 2011
Regional President Speech
Sandra Pianalto · President
Current Issues in U.S. Monetary Policy :: April 7, 2011 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
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□ SHRRE
Current Issues in U.S. Monetary
Policy
Additional Information
Sandra Pianalto
Introduction
President and CEO,
In this session on central bank policy, I know that Salvatore Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
(Salvatore Rossi, Chief Economist, Bank of Italy) and I will be
Global Interdependence Center
covering a lot of the same ground even though circumstances differ
Conference: Capital Markets in the
within our countries. That is because central bankers share a
Post-Crisis Environment Part IV
common responsibility-keeping the purchasing power of our
Rome, Italy
currencies stable.
Over the past 30 years, monetary policymakers around the world April 7, 2011
have come to realize that a low and stable rate of inflation is
absolutely critical for achieving other important objectives, like
maximum sustainable economic growth, healthy labor markets, and
financial stability. The Federal Reserve certainly has focused on
maintaining price stability, as I will discuss this morning.
First, let me share a bit about my role in the U.S. central bank. As
the president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, I
lead the Fourth Federal Reserve District, which includes all of Ohio
and portions of three adjoining states. One important part of my job
is to represent this diverse region at the FOMC, or the Federal Open
Market Committee, meetings in Washington.
The FOMC consists of members of the Board of Governors and the 12
Reserve Bank presidents, and it meets eight times a year. The
Committee decides on critical monetary policy issues, such as targets
for short-term interest rates. Our objectives are to promote price
stability and maximum employment. That is the dual mandate that
the U.S. Congress has given the Federal Reserve.
Each of the 12 Reserve Bank presidents brings information about his
or her region to the monetary policy process. While this regional
input is important to understanding economic conditions, the Federal
Reserve’s monetary policy is national in scope and responds to
economic conditions in the entire country.
As you know, the U.S. economy is emerging from the worst recession
since the Great Depression of the 1930s. This morning, I will talk
about the Federal Reserve’s response to the deep recession. I will
then turn to my outlook for U.S. economic growth and inflation, and I
will conclude with some comments about the implications for U.S.
monetary policy.
As always, the views I express today are mine alone and do not
necessarily reflect those of my colleagues in the Federal Reserve
System.
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Current Issues in U.S. Monetary Policy :: April 7, 2011 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
The Federal Reserve’s Response to the Deep
Recession
To help you think about monetary policy in the United States today,
I’d like to begin with a brief discussion of how the Federal Reserve
has responded to the deep recession. As you know, the downward
spiral in the United States began with the housing crisis, which led to
the financial crisis. Financial markets froze, production collapsed,
and employment plummeted.
This recent recession was the longest and deepest since the dark days
of the Great Depression. It lasted 18 months, from December 2007 to
June 2009. Industrial production fell 17 percent, which was the
largest decline since 1939. At the end of the recession, businesses
were using just about two-thirds of their existing production
capacity.
Employment fell more than 6 percent, which is again a post
Depression record. The loss of nearly 9 million jobs during the
recession led unemployment rates to soar from under 5 percent to
more than 10 percent. In addition, the value of U.S. homes fell
sharply, in some areas more than 30 percent. This decline in
economic activity also had dramatic effects on underlying consumer
price inflation, which dropped from about 3 percent in late 2007 to
0.5 percent in the middle of last year.
During the financial crisis, the Federal Reserve responded
aggressively and creatively to the rapidly changing outlook for growth
and inflation. From September 2007 to December 2008, the Federal
Reserve lowered its short-term interest rate target, known as the
federal funds rate target, from 5Va percent to effectively zero, where
it stands today. As the financial crisis deepened, we had to provide
more support to financial markets and the economy than we could
deliver by using interest-rate actions alone.
Initially, our actions were focused on establishing programs to provide
liquidity to financial markets and to get credit flowing again. Later,
to support economic activity more broadly, we sought to lower
longer-term interest rates by purchasing $1.7 trillion worth of
mortgage-backed securities, government agency debt, and Treasury
securities. Last fall, we initiated a second round of large-scale asset
purchases to further bolster economic growth and lessen the risk of
inflation falling below zero for a sustained period. As a result of our
actions, our own balance sheet expanded enormously, from roughly
$900 billion before the crisis to approximately $2.6 trillion today.
It is fair to describe the Federal Reserve’s policy stance as highly
accommodative. I believe this stance has been effective. We avoided
the worst possible scenario, a repeat of the Great Depression
worldwide. Yet, today, many challenges remain.
The Outlook for Growth and Inflation
With that background on the recession and our monetary policy
response, I would now like to turn to today’s outlook for the U.S.
economy and inflation. In preparing for FOMC meetings, I look closely
at the outlook for GDP growth, employment, and inflation. I want to
emphasize that it is the outlook that is critical in pursuing our
monetary policy objectives, not current economic conditions, because
there is a significant delay between policy actions and when those
policy actions affect the economy.
For almost two years since we emerged from the deep recession, the
U.S. economy has been recovering, but at a gradual and bumpy pace.
In terms of national output, it has taken us two years just to make up
the ground we lost since the recession began. More recently, though,
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Current Issues in U.S. Monetary Policy :: April 7, 2011 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
the U.S. recovery appears to have established a firmer footing. The
pace of hiring has picked up, and more industries have been adding
workers. These are encouraging signs that should point to stronger
job growth in the coming months. Also, consumer spending has shown
more strength than most forecasters expected. These are good signs
that the recovery is entering a virtuous cycle of growth. Rising
employment, incomes, and profits are supporting growth in retail
sales and business demand, which in turn should fuel further growth
in employment, incomes, and profits.
Up to this point, the recovery has been supported significantly by
strong growth in exports, manufacturing, and business investment in
equipment and software. Since the recession ended, exports have
grown at a double-digit rate, and manufacturing production has
grown at an annual average of 8 percent. The recovery of U.S.
exports and manufacturing is part of the global recovery of trade
following its collapse during the recession. The acceleration in U.S.
exports has been led by a range of goods, including industrial
equipment, automobiles and parts, and computer equipment.
Despite these sources of strength, not all Americans are sharing
equally in the recovery. Unemployment continues to be a significant
problem. At this point, the U.S. economy has added back only 1.5
million of the 9 million lost jobs. Also, the continuing problems in the
housing sector pose a significant drag on economic growth.
Historically, investments in new home construction and improvements
to existing homes help the economy to snap back quickly from
recessions and help to spur GDP growth. However, since the last
recession ended, instead of helping to support the recovery, housing
investment has fallen by more than 2 percent.
Looking ahead, I expect the U.S. economy to continue to expand at a
moderate rate, a bit above its long-term average growth rate of 3
percent per year. Of course, there are potential risks to this outlook,
most notably the recent sharp rise in energy and commodity prices.
For example, increases in energy prices would effectively tax
consumers, reducing their purchasing power, and in turn would
modestly slow the pace of GDP growth. Fortunately, these effects
would likely be mild as long as the U.S. economy remains on a firmer
footing.
Nevertheless, if energy and commodity prices continue to increase
sharply, people could start to worry about the consequences for
inflation. The natural question in these times is whether the recent
surge in oil prices will be enough of a driving force to cause a lasting
increase in the rate of inflation in the United States. At this point, I
don’t think it will, and let me explain why.
First, large increases in food or energy prices tend to be temporary.
History shows that they are often followed by sharp declines. For
example, in 2006, oil prices in the United States rose significantly
over the first eight months of the year but then dropped in the
remainder of the year. Second, to cause a lasting rise in inflation, the
increases in food or energy prices have to be large enough and persist
long enough that they spill over and cause sustained increases in a
wide array of other consumer prices. At this point, there is no
evidence of a broad spillover, but as a central banker, I keep a close
eye on this.
To assess the underlying trends in a broad array of consumer prices,
my staff at the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland calculates and
publishes an indicator known as the median CPI. This index is
designed to provide a reliable measure of the average increase in a
wide set of consumer prices. Research at the Bank has shown the
median CPI to be a superior predictor of future inflation rates. To
this point, inflation in the median CPI remains very low: just 1
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Current Issues in U.S. Monetary Policy :: April 7, 2011 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
percent over the past year. Based on the behavior of the median CPI,
I don’t expect recent rises in food and energy prices to cause a broad
spillover into a wide array of consumer prices, or in other words, a
lasting increase in inflation. Specifically, I expect the underlying
trend in broad consumer prices to rise only gradually toward 2
percent by 2013. Of course, just as I consider the risks to economic
growth, I also need to consider the risks to my inflation outlook.
My outlook assumes that several important factors will keep inflation
in check. One of these factors is the continuing slow growth in wages,
which helps determine the cost of producing goods and services and,
in turn, the prices set by firms. Another factor is retailers’ reluctance
to raise prices in the face of strong competition and soft business
conditions. The U.S. economy still has a way to go to more fully
recover from the steep recession, which will restrain growth in wages
and retail prices.
Another important factor in my outlook for inflation is the public’s
expectation that the Federal Reserve will keep inflation contained.
While it may sound like a self-fulfilling prophecy to say that we will
have low inflation because we collectively expect low inflation, the
relationship between actual and expected inflation has been borne
out over history. One reason is that expectations of inflation play a
crucial role in the price-setting decisions of firms. When firms expect
lower inflation, they raise prices more slowly. Despite the recent
surge in food and energy prices, measures of longer-run inflation
expectations remain below 2 percent. These measures come from
bond yields and surveys of economic forecasters.
Implications for Monetary Policy
So, with my outlook for a moderate recovery and underlying inflation
gradually moving toward 2 percent, I’d like to turn to the
implications of the outlook for U.S. monetary policy.
Eventually, the FOMC will begin to remove our policy
accommodation. This process will involve raising the target for short
term interest rates, draining bank reserves to prevent an undue rise
in the broad money supply, and reducing the size of our balance
sheet to more normal levels. I believe that when the time comes, we
have all the tools we need to make an exit from our current policy
stance.
More immediately, as the FOMC’s most recent statement indicated,
the Committee is watching carefully for any signs of an unanticipated
spillover from oil and other commodity prices into underlying
inflation measures. A key to preventing this spillover is to keep long-
run inflation expectations anchored because, as I mentioned earlier,
inflation expectations are an important determinant of inflation. The
current stability in inflation expectations was not achieved just by
good fortune. The public’s expectation that inflation will remain low
and stable over the long run comes from their expectation that the
Federal Reserve’s monetary policy will deliver low and stable
inflation over the long run. As a Federal Reserve policymaker, I
believe that it is my responsibility to do everything I can to
underscore confidence in our commitment to maintain price stability.
But I understand that price stability can mean different things to
different people. Today, the concept is vague and the FOMC has not
established a formal inflation objective.
With the potential for inflation expectations to be more volatile in
the face of energy and commodity price shocks, I think it could be an
opportune time for the FOMC to be more specific and publicly
announce an explicit numerical inflation objective.
Adopting an explicit numerical objective would have to be the
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Current Issues in U.S. Monetary Policy :: April 7, 2011 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
decision of the whole FOMC. My own preference is 2 percent over the
medium term, an inflation objective that is quite similar to the
targets of many central banks around the world. As much as the
concept of “zero inflation” appeals to me, 2 percent is a much more
practical numerical objective than zero. An objective set much below
2 percent increases the likelihood that the FOMc would need to push
short-term interest rates down to zero for an extended time to head
off a deflation or to fulfill its mandate for maximum employment. As
we are seeing today, keeping interest rates near zero complicates the
monetary policy process. Although I remain committed to fulfilling
both aspects of our dual mandate for price stability and maximum
employment, I think it would be unwise for the Federal Reserve to
establish a corresponding numerical objective for unemployment. The
long-run sustainable rate of unemployment can move around for a
variety of reasons, such as the demographic makeup of the
population and changes in how labor markets function. Since the
Federal Reserve cannot know what the sustainable level of
unemployment is, or how it will evolve over time, it should not set a
numerical objective for unemployment.
Establishing an explicit inflation objective need not imply any
material change in the current conduct of monetary policy. The U.S.
economic expansion is still quite uneven, and it has considerable
ground to make up. History suggests that the effects of recent
commodity price pressures on consumer price inflation are likely to
be transitory. From my perspective, economic conditions, including
low levels of resource utilization, subdued inflation trends, and
stable long-term inflation expectations, warrant the continuation of
our current monetary policy stance. Indeed, my outlook for economic
growth and inflation assumes that we complete our asset purchase
program as originally scheduled, and keep our federal funds rate
target at exceptionally low levels for an extended period. As always,
if my outlook for economic growth or inflation changes, I stand ready
to adjust my view about what constitutes appropriate monetary
policy.
Conclusion
These are challenging times for our economy, and they are
compounded by the unrest we are seeing in the Middle East and
North Africa, and the devastating human tragedy in Japan. In these
times, it is important not only to develop a view of the most
probable path for the U.S. economy, but also to consider potential
risks to the economy and to be prepared to respond to them. For my
part, I will continue to study the financial and economic situation to
determine the right policy actions to fulfill the Federal Reserve’s
dual mandate of price stability and maximum employment.
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Cite this document
APA
Sandra Pianalto (2011, April 6). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20110407_sandra_pianalto
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20110407_sandra_pianalto,
author = {Sandra Pianalto},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2011},
month = {Apr},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20110407_sandra_pianalto},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}